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Chapter 2 Introduction to Logic Circuits

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1 Chapter 2 Introduction to Logic Circuits
Chapter Objectives: You will be introduced to: Logic functions and circuits Boolean algebra for dealing with logic functions Logic gates and synthesis of simple circuits CAD tools and the VHDL hardware description language Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

2 2.1 Variables and Functions
x = x = 1 (a) Two states of a switch S x (b) Symbol for a switch Figure A binary switch. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

3 Figure 2.2. A light controlled by a switch.
Battery x Light (a) Simple connection to a battery S Power Light supply x (b) Using a ground connection as the return path Figure A light controlled by a switch. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

4 Figure 2.3. Two basic functions.
Power x1 x2 Light supply (a) The logical AND function (series connection) S x1 Power Light supply S x2 (b) The logical OR function (parallel connection) Figure Two basic functions. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

5 S Power Light supply Figure 2.4. A series-parallel connection. X1 X3
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

6 2.2 Inversion R Power supply S Light Figure 2.5. An inverting circuit.
x Figure An inverting circuit. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

7 2.3 Truth Table Figure A truth table for the AND and OR operations. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

8 Figure 2.7. Three-input AND and OR operations.
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

9 2.4 Logic Gates and Networks
x 1 x 2 x 1 x × x x × x × × x 1 2 1 2 n x 2 x n (a) AND gates x 1 x 2 x 1 x + x x + x + + x x 1 2 1 2 n 2 x n (b) OR gates x x Figure The basic gates. (c) NOT gate Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

10 Figure 2.9. The function from Figure 2.4.
x 1 x 2 f = ( x + x ) × x x 1 2 3 3 Figure The function from Figure 2.4. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

11 Figure 2.10. An example of logic networks.
1 1 1 1 x 1 A 1 1 1 f 1 B 1 1 x 2 Figure An example of logic networks. (a) Network that implements f = x + x × x 1 1 2 x 1 2 f , ( ) (b) Truth table A B 1 x 1 1 x 2 1 A (c) Timing diagram 1 B 1 f Time Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

12 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
1 1 1 1 x 1 1 1 1 1 1 g x 2 (d) Network that implements g = x + x 1 2 Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

13 2.5 Boolean Algebra Figure 2.11. Proof of DeMorgan’s theorem in 15a.
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

14 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
2.5 Boolean Algebra identity X + 0 = X 1D. X • 1 = X null X + 1 = 1 2D. X • 0 = 0 idempotency: X + X = X 3D. X • X = X involution: (X’)’ = X complementarity: X + X’ = 1 5D. X • X’ = 0 commutativity: X + Y = Y + X 6D. X • Y = Y • X associativity: (X + Y) + Z = X + (Y + Z) 7D. (X • Y) • Z = X • (Y • Z) Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

15 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
2.5 Boolean Algebra distributivity: 8. X • (Y + Z) = (X • Y) + (X • Z) 8D. X + (Y • Z) = (X + Y) • (X + Z) uniting: 9. X • Y + X • Y’ = X 9D. (X + Y) • (X + Y’) = X absorption: 10. X + X • Y = X 10D. X • (X + Y) = X 11. (X + Y’) • Y = X • Y 11D. (X • Y’) + Y = X + Y factoring: 12. (X + Y) • (X’ + Z) = 12D. X • Y + X’ • Z = X • Z + X’ • Y (X + Z) • (X’ + Y) concensus: 13. (X • Y) + (Y • Z) + (X’ • Z) = 13D. (X + Y) • (Y + Z) • (X’ + Z) = X • Y + X’ • Z (X + Y) • (X’ + Z) Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

16 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
2.5 Boolean Algebra de Morgan’s: 14. (X + Y + ...)’ = X’ • Y’ • D. (X • Y • ...)’ = X’ + Y’ + ... generalized de Morgan’s: 15. f’(X1,X2,...,Xn,0,1,+,•) = f(X1’,X2’,...,Xn’,1,0,•,+) establishes relationship between • and + Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

17 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
Duality a dual of a Boolean expression is derived by replacing • by +, + by •, 0 by 1, and 1 by 0, and leaving variables unchanged any theorem that can be proven is thus also proven for its dual! a meta-theorem (a theorem about theorems) Different than deMorgan’s Law this is a statement about theorems this is not a way to manipulate (re-write) expressions Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

18 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
2.5.1 The Venn Diagram (a) Constant 1 (b) Constant 0 x x x x (c) Variable x (d) x Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

19 Figure 2.12. The Venn diagram representation.
x y x y (e) x × y (f) x + y x y x y z (g) x × y (h) x × y + z Figure The Venn diagram representation. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

20 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
Figure Verification of the distributive property x (y + z) = x y + x z x y x y z z (a) x (d) x × y x y x y z z (b) y + z (e) x × z x y x y z z (c) x × ( y + z ) (f) x × y + x × z Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

21 Proving theorems (perfect induction)
Using perfect induction (complete truth table): e.g., de Morgan’s: X Y X’ Y’ (X + Y)’ X’ • Y’ (X + Y)’ = X’ • Y’ NOR is equivalent to AND with inputs complemented 1 1 X Y X’ Y’ (X • Y)’ X’ + Y’ (X • Y)’ = X’ + Y’ NAND is equivalent to OR with inputs complemented 1 1 Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

22 2.5.3 Precedence of Operators
NOT, then AND, then OR Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

23 From Boolean expressions to logic gates
More than one way to map expressions to gates e.g., Z = A’ • B’ • (C + D) = (A’ • (B’ • (C + D))) T2 T1 use of 3-input gate A Z A B T1 B Z C C T2 D D Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

24 2.6 Synthesis Using AND, OR, and NOT Gates
Figure A function to be synthesized. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

25 Figure 2.16. Two implementations of a function in Figure 2.15.
x 1 x 2 f (a) Canonical sum-of-products x 1 f x 2 (b) Minimal-cost realization Figure Two implementations of a function in Figure 2.15. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

26 Canonical forms (Sum of Products and Product of Sums)
Truth table is the unique signature of a Boolean function The same truth table can have many gate realizations Canonical forms standard forms for a Boolean expression provides a unique algebraic signature Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

27 Sum-of-products canonical forms
Also known as disjunctive normal form Also known as minterm expansion F = + ABC’ + ABC A’B’C + AB’C + A’BC A B C F F’ F’ = A’B’C’ + A’BC’ + AB’C’ Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

28 Sum-of-products canonical form (cont’d)
Product term (or minterm) ANDed product of literals – input combination for which output is true each variable appears exactly once, true or inverted (but not both) A B C minterms A’B’C’ m0 0 0 1 A’B’C m1 0 1 0 A’BC’ m2 0 1 1 A’BC m3 1 0 0 AB’C’ m4 1 0 1 AB’C m5 1 1 0 ABC’ m6 1 1 1 ABC m7 F in canonical form: F(A, B, C) = m(1,3,5,6,7) = m1 + m3 + m5 + m6 + m7 = A’B’C + A’BC + AB’C + ABC’ + ABC canonical form  minimal form F(A, B, C) = A’B’C + A’BC + AB’C + ABC + ABC’ = (A’B’ + A’B + AB’ + AB)C + ABC’ = ((A’ + A)(B’ + B))C + ABC’ = C + ABC’ = ABC’ + C = AB + C short-hand notation for minterms of 3 variables Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

29 Product-of-sums canonical form
Also known as conjunctive normal form Also known as maxterm expansion F = F = (A + B’ + C) (A’ + B + C) (A + B + C) A B C F F’ F’ = (A + B + C’) (A + B’ + C’) (A’ + B + C’) (A’ + B’ + C) (A’ + B’ + C’) Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

30 Product-of-sums canonical form (cont’d)
Sum term (or maxterm) ORed sum of literals – input combination for which output is false each variable appears exactly once, true or inverted (but not both) A B C maxterms A+B+C M0 0 0 1 A+B+C’ M1 0 1 0 A+B’+C M2 0 1 1 A+B’+C’ M3 1 0 0 A’+B+C M4 1 0 1 A’+B+C’ M5 1 1 0 A’+B’+C M6 1 1 1 A’+B’+C’ M7 F in canonical form: F(A, B, C) = M(0,2,4) = M0 • M2 • M4 = (A + B + C) (A + B’ + C) (A’ + B + C) canonical form  minimal form F(A, B, C) = (A + B + C) (A + B’ + C) (A’ + B + C) = (A + B + C) (A + B’ + C) (A + B + C) (A’ + B + C) = (A + C) (B + C) short-hand notation for maxterms of 3 variables Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

31 S-o-P, P-o-S, and de Morgan’s theorem
Sum-of-products F’ = A’B’C’ + A’BC’ + AB’C’ Apply de Morgan’s (F’)’ = (A’B’C’ + A’BC’ + AB’C’)’ F = (A + B + C) (A + B’ + C) (A’ + B + C) Product-of-sums F’ = (A + B + C’) (A + B’ + C’) (A’ + B + C’) (A’ + B’ + C) (A’ + B’ + C’) (F’)’ = ( (A + B + C’)(A + B’ + C’)(A’ + B + C’)(A’ + B’ + C)(A’ + B’ + C’) )’ F = A’B’C + A’BC + AB’C + ABC’ + ABC Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

32 Four alternative two-level implementations of F = AB + C
canonical sum-of-products minimized sum-of-products canonical product-of-sums minimized product-of-sums B F1 C F2 F3 F4 Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

33 Mapping between canonical forms
Minterm to maxterm conversion use maxterms whose indices do not appear in minterm expansion e.g., F(A,B,C) = m(1,3,5,6,7) = M(0,2,4) Maxterm to minterm conversion use minterms whose indices do not appear in maxterm expansion e.g., F(A,B,C) = M(0,2,4) = m(1,3,5,6,7) Minterm expansion of F to minterm expansion of F’ use minterms whose indices do not appear e.g., F(A,B,C) = m(1,3,5,6,7) F’(A,B,C) = m(0,2,4) Maxterm expansion of F to maxterm expansion of F’ use maxterms whose indices do not appear e.g., F(A,B,C) = M(0,2,4) F’(A,B,C) = M(1,3,5,6,7) Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

34 Figure 2.17 Three-variable minterms and maxterms.
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

35 Figure 2.18. A three-variable function.
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

36 Figure 2.19. Two realizations of a function in Figure 2.18.
x 2 f x 3 x 1 (a) A minimal sum-of-products realization x 1 x 3 f x 2 (b) A minimal product-of-sums realization Figure Two realizations of a function in Figure 2.18. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

37 NAND and NOR Logic Networks
Figure NAND and NOR gates. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

38 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
x 1 2 + = (a) (b) Figure DeMorgan’s theorem in terms of logic gates. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

39 Figure 2.22. Using NAND gates to implement a sum-of-products.
x 1 2 3 4 5 Figure Using NAND gates to implement a sum-of-products. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

40 Figure 2.23. Using NOR gates to implement a product-of sums.
x 1 2 3 4 5 Figure Using NOR gates to implement a product-of sums. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

41 Figure 2.24 NOR-gate realization of the function in Example 2.4.
(a) POS implementation x1 x2 f x3 (b) NOR implementation Figure NOR-gate realization of the function in Example 2.4. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

42 Figure 2.25. NAND-gate realization of the function in Example 2.3.
(a) SOP implementation x1 f x2 x3 (b) NAND implementation Figure NAND-gate realization of the function in Example 2.3. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

43 Figure 2.26. Truth table for a three-way light control.
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

44 Figure 2.27. Implementation of the function in Figure 2.26.
(a) Sum-of-products realization (b) Product-of-sums realization x1 x3 x2 Figure Implementation of the function in Figure 2.26. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

45 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
x1 x2 f (s, x1, x2) 1 x 1 s 1 1 1 1 1 x f 1 1 f x s 2 1 1 1 1 x 2 1 1 (b) Circuit (c) Graphical symbol 1 1 1 1 (a) Truth table s f (s, x1, x2) x1 1 x2 (d) More compact truth-table representation Figure Implementation of a multiplexer. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

46 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
Introduction to VHDL Design conception Figure A typical CAD system. DESIGN ENTRY Schematic capture VHDL No Design correct? Synthesis Yes Functional simulation Physical design No Design correct? Timing simulation Yes No Physical design Timing requirements met? Chip configuration Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

47 Figure 2.30. A simple logic function.
x 1 x 2 f x 3 Figure A simple logic function. ENTITY example1 IS PORT ( x1, x2, x3 : IN BIT ; f : OUT BIT ) ; END example1 ; Figure VHDL entity declaration for the circuit in Figure 2.30. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

48 ARCHITECTURE LogicFunc OF example1 IS BEGIN
f <= (x1 AND x2) OR (NOT x2 AND x3) ; END LogicFunc ; Figure VHDL architecture for the entity in Figure 2.31. Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

49 Figure 2.33. Complete VHDL code for the circuit in Figure 2.30.
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

50 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic

51 Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic
Cpt2 - Intro. to Logic Ckts. Portions © Copyright 2009, S. Brown and Z Vranesic


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